Word: hatefully
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Several players have not returned this year because Park's schedule is so demanding, but DeMichele has nothing but praise for the approach. "You might hate it while you're in the Cage, but afterwards, when you realize all that you get out of a practice, you really appreciate it," DeMichele said...
...last day in Oriente, we went to the Moncada barracks in the center of Santiago. On July 26, 1953, 135 Cubans with a strong love for their countrymen and a burning hate for tinhorn dictators with rich American friends tried unsuccessfully to capture the barracks in an attempt to spark an insurrection which they though would topple Batista's government. There is a huge school now in the long, pink building with seventeen-year-old bullet holes still pock-marking its walls. That day the fourth-graders had filled a bulletin board with a photo exhibit of Vietnamese children...
...hate to see them get too long," said Adlai Stevenson III. "Generally, I am happier when they are short," pronounced John D. Rockefeller IV. Sideburns? Speeches? Novels? Contempt sentences? What the two young politicians were discussing was hemlines. The subject heated up as a result of Mme. Georges Pompidou's triumphant American tour with those calf-clutching Longuettes from Paris. In women's eyes, at least, Mme. Pompidou just may have tipped the scales in the year's mini-midi-maxi skirmish. In the front line of the battle, Los Angeles-based James Galanos became the first...
...define. This difficult technique has been mastered by the entire Charles Playhouse cast. After the innocent Garga-from the "flatlands"-is burdened and corrupted by Schlink's business world. Michael Moriarty continually shifts from one aspect of the character to the other, presenting kindness, then bitterness; love, then hate. Nicholas Kepros is amazingly inscrutable as the ruthless Schlink, but Kepros occasionally reveals the affectionate, yet lonely and helpless man who dwells beneath this harsh facade...
...family as that of a passive being subjected to the flaws in that relationship. He cries and accuses his father of hiding the missing piece, thereby provoking his nervous mother into upsetting the puzzle. He turns to his parents with tears in his eyes and says, "I hate you." The position of the child-as a reflection of the strains upon a marriage, and as an independent moral being who is really hurt-has been fully described without letting him take over the film as the boy of La Muette...